(Watch the full-screen, high definition format here.)
The Black Panther Party’s Living Legacy
–Touring Oakland and Berkeley with Billy X Jennings
(Part One)
By Angola 3 News
This month, over twenty students enrolled in the “Dismantling Racism” class offered by St. Catherine University in Minnesota traveled to the San Francisco Bay Area. The class focused primarily on California’s prisons and what anti-prison activists are doing to challenge the human rights violations and racism endemic to California’s infamous prison system.
Last week, the class was taken around on a Black Panther History Tour in Oakland and Berkeley, led by Billy X Jennings from It’s AboutTime BPP Alumni & Legacy. Along with ongoing BPP history exhibits at the Alameda County Law Library in downtown Oakland and the window of Rasputin Music on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley is a new photo exhibit running until February 28, entitled Louder Than Words, at La Peña Cultural Center (3105 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley). An important friend and ally of the International Coalition to Free the Angola 3, Billy X Jennings’ work was previously spotlighted in an interview with Angola 3 News, entitled We Called Ourselves the Childrenof Malcolm.
The college class was co-led by Professor Nancy Heitzeg, of the Sociology and Critical Studies of Race and Ethnicity departments at St. Catherine University. Heitzeg was first featured in an interview with Angola 3 News about having taken a similar class on a tour at Angola State Prison in Louisiana, entitled Visiting a Modern-Day Slave Plantion. We have since done three more interviews with her: The Racialization of Crime and Punishment and Abolishing the Prison Industrial Complex (parts one and two). Heitzeg is also the editor and frequent contributor to the Criminal Injustice series at Critical Mass Progress, with her most recent articles focusing on Angola Prison & the broader Louisiana ‘justice’ system, as well as the January 26 protest at Chowchilla women’s prison in central California.
Co-instructor William W. Smith IV is a juvenile correctional officer and community consultant on the prison industrial complex & the school to prison pipeline. Following the tour, he told Angola 3 News that he thought “the tour was very well done, with lots of information. We were extremely lucky to have that opportunity to talk and walk with Billy X Jennings. I wish more young people could be exposed to this because it was truly powerful. This information can change your mind, and it can enhance your lifestyle. Race still matters in criminal justice and all things. This tour reminds us of events/stories they want us to forget. We will not turn our backs.”
Professor Heitzeg reflected on the recent tour, telling Angola 3 News:
The Black Panther History tour with Billy X Jennings was an incredible experience. The discussion of the history at the site of key locations was very powerful.. Students commented on how much they learned about this often hidden history; others noted how the tour undid the stereotypes and mis-education they had received about the Panthers from the mainstream. This was transformational for them.
As someone who was deeply influenced by the BPP vision at a very young age, this tour was invaluable. It was extraordinary to experience this living history through the words of Billy X. Much credit to the City of Oakland for acknowledging the legacy of the BPP through street signs and various public displays of the position of the Party and its many community programs. Certainly the living legacy of the BPP is continually expressed in a variety of programs — breakfast programs for kids, community health clinics, and more – they we now accept as a given. We all owe them a debt of gratitude and a place of honor in our history.
The BPP’s early critique of capitalism, of police brutality, of racism/exclusion in the criminal injustice system is foundational for all those of us who continue to challenge what we now call the “prison industrial complex”. They were true visionaries whose call for a rainbow coalition, intersectionality and community empowerment continues to guide our work. What We Want/What We Believe – including “land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice and peace” – has not changed at all.
(Stay tuned for part two, touring Berkeley and downtown Oakland!)
–Angola 3 News is a project of the International Coalition to Free the Angola 3. Our website is www.angola3news.com where we provide the latest news about the Angola 3. We are also creating our own media projects, which spotlight the issues central to the story of the Angola 3, like racism, repression, prisons, human rights, solitary confinement as torture, and more.



5 Comments

I remember when BPP was formed. I also remember the day in Julius Hoffman’s court when Bobby Seale was shackled and gagged while a defendant with the Chicago 7.
The dismantling of the Bill of Rights was well on its way a long time before the criminal Bush administration was installed by the criminal Republicans on the supreme court, themselves appointed by criminal Republican administrations.
It’s OK for deranged white people to arm themselves, but civilization as we know it would come to an end if Black people dare to transgress against the hidden Black Codes in every state of this country.
The only thing that ended at Appomatox Courthouse was white people killing white people.
Thanks for this diary and for keeping this information alive and relevant. Oakland needs the 10-point plan now more than ever.
All Power to the People!
Thanks for this important diary, and thank you very much to Professor Nancy Heitzeg and St. Catherine University. We all need to know this stuff — is there an on-line version or notes?
“Race still matters in criminal justice and all things. This tour reminds us of events/stories they want us to forget. We will not turn our backs.”
Amen. Thank you for the post, and to all involved in the tour and working to Free the Three.
This piece by Sundiata Acoli just came in from BAR. Lots of history of mass incarcerations, political prisoners, etc.
“i also bring you solidarity greetings from those who have been on a rolling on hunger strike in the California state prisons. They’re joined in a fierce struggle to end solitary confinement, some of whom have been held in solitary 20 years or more; 20 years in conditions described by their outside representative thusly:
“The long-term (indeed life long) indefinite isolated solitary confinement in 7′ 7″ x 11′ 7″ concrete boxes for 22 1/2 hours per day in California’s Pelican Bay and Corcoran Secure Housing Units (SHUS) is torture. It is cruel. Without phone calls, without human touch, degrading and humiliating routines, bad food, insufficient clothing, no fresh air and they NEVER see natural sunlight, terrible mattresses… without hope of ever escaping, all this most often for reasons that have nothing to do with behavior, or even disciplinary matters. This is unprecedented in the history of the United States. Isolated for life for alleged associations, for what books you read, what art you draw or for what you believe in…. this is commonplace in the California system – a system which takes up more than half of California’s budget.”
goddam. what have we become?